The Oklahoman

New antibiotic approved for drug-resistant tuberculos­is

- By Yasmeen Abutaleb

TB Alliance said 95 of its first 107 patients in its clinical trial had a successful outcome after six months of treatment with the three- drug regimen. The historical treatment success rate is 34 percent.

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administra­tion last week approved a new drug for highly drug-resistant tuberculos­is, the world's leading infectious cause of death.

Tuberculos­is kills 1.6 million people a year, about 500,000 of whom suffer from drug-resistant strains of the disease.

The antibiotic, called pretomanid, was developed by a nonprofit group called TB Alliance at a time when few companies are investing in the expensive and unprofitab­le endeavor of creating next-generation antibiotic­s.

Some researcher­s hope that TB Alliance can serve as a model for antibiotic drug developmen­t as health authoritie­s warn about the growing danger of drugresist­ant infections. The United Nations has projected such infections could cause 10 million deaths each year by 2050 if nothing is done.

“We can have a huge impact on the lives of people who are afflicted and also take a major step ultimately toward, really, the eradicatio­n of a disease like TB,” said Mel Spigelman, president and chief executive officer of TB Alliance.

Drug companies have largely abandoned developmen­t of antibiotic­s because they can cost upward of $1 billion to bring to market but yield far less revenue than drugs for chronic conditions, such as high blood pressure and high cholestero­l, or specialty drugs that can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars or more.

Antibiotic­s are often inexpensiv­e and are taken for days or weeks at a time, compared with drugs for cancer and chronic diseases that are taken for months or years.

All antibiotic­s approved in the last decade have had disappoint­ing sales, and Achaogen, a company that had an antibiotic approved last year, filed for bankruptcy in April. Pretomanid is part of a threedrug regimen against highly resistant forms of TB and is the third FDA-approved anti-TB drug in more than 40 years.

TB Alliance said 95 of its first 107 patients in its clinical trial had a successful outcome after six months of treatment with the three-drug regimen. The historical treatment success rate is 34 percent.

Drug-resistant TB is currently treated with myriad drugs and can require thousands of pills. It has been reported by more than 120 countries, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Bacterial infections develop resistance to the antibiotic­s used against them, meaning once treatable infections, including some forms of tuberculos­is, have become extraordin­arily difficult to treat.

Experts have warned of a looming post-antibiotic era, in which many infections may become untreatabl­e.

TB Alliance said it hopes the FDA's approval will enable other countries, such as China, India and South Africa to OK the drug and make it available to their residents. The disease is highly contagious and spreads through coughing, sneezing or even talking.

In the New England Journal of Medicine this month, researcher­s and infectious disease physicians argued the current model for antibiotic developmen­t is broken, especially because the few companies that do develop them end up competing with each other to develop drugs for the same infections.

Instead, they propose nonprofit organizati­ons, including TB Alliance, take on a larger role because they do not face pressure from shareholde­rs to develop revenue-generating drugs.

Some experts say government­s need to step up and offer more financial incentives for companies. Such efforts by the U.S. government have led to an increase in developmen­t — 42 antibiotic­s were in developmen­t in March 2019, compared with six in 2004 — but many of the drugs have been redundant or have not addressed some of the most urgent threats, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts.

“TB is much more narrow and focused and has a precedent in the not-for-profit world,” said Helen Boucher, a professor of medicine at Tufts Medical Center and director of the Tufts Center for Integrated Management of Antimicrob­ial Resistance. “Economists have told us and others that a nonprofit model would not be adequate to meet the needs for the robust and renewable pipeline we need in America.”

The nonprofit model is promising for neglected diseases and those that primarily impact residents in poorer countries, Boucher said.

“There isn't a market to sell (a TB drug) to make money so it was imperative that a nonprofit take that on,” Boucher said. “Any progress is good progress.”

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